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Social processing of dynamic naturalistic social interactions
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Social processing of dynamic naturalistic social interactions

Katie Daughters, Simona Skripkauskaite and Kami Koldewyn
Quarterly journal of experimental psychology (2006), Vol.79(2), pp.300-310
02/2026
PMID: 40380900

Abstract

Adolescent Adult Attention - physiology Cues Empathy - physiology Eye Movements - physiology Female Fixation, Ocular - physiology Humans Interpersonal Relations Male Motion Perception - physiology Photic Stimulation Social Interaction Social Perception Young Adult
Research suggests that static depictions of social interactions preferentially capture our attention compared to non-interactions. Research also suggests that motion captures attention. To date, therefore, it is unknown whether social interactions preferentially capture attention relative to non-interactions, over and above motion cues. The present study captured 81 participants' eye-gaze when viewing 4-s video clips of social interactions compared to motion-matched non-interactions. We hypothesised that participants would spend more time looking at the two agents in the videos relative to the background when viewing social interactions compared to non-interactions. Results confirmed our hypothesis and demonstrated that this effect was stronger for individuals with greater empathy and lower autistic traits. These results add to the growing body of research investigating the processing of social interactions in complex, naturalistic stimuli and demonstrate that social interactions do preferentially capture attention, even when motion cues are present.
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https://doi.org/10.1177/17470218251346724View
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